These
three principles you must have in readiness:
In
the things that you do, do nothing either inconsiderately or otherwise than as
justice herself would act; but with respect to what may happen to you from
without, consider that it happens either by chance or according to Providence,
and you must neither blame chance nor accuse Providence. . . .
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 12.24 (tr
Long)
Let me
look at what I have too often falsely considered to be justice: getting as much
as I want, and giving as little as I must. I will only give, of course, if it
helps me to get what I want.
“Oh no,
I’m not that way at all!” I won’t speak for you, as I can only speak for
myself, but I know I have done this far too many times, always, of course, with
the best of intentions.
It
required a total rewiring of my thinking to change any of that, to see that
there was no difference between “you” and “me”, that what I expect to be given
can never be any different than what I expect to give. You and I are the very
same, and we are both called to the very same respect for one another. That is
a matter of sound reason, not of sticky sentiment.
“But the
world treats me unfairly!” Does this excuse my acting unfairly? And am I so
sure it is unfair? Another may have acted poorly. Does this change the merit of
my own actions? It is always within my power to respond to injustice with
justice.
There is
always a way to make the wrong things right. It is completely in my way of
thinking.
Perhaps
the world works by random fate, or perhaps it works by the fate of Providence.
Perhaps it happened for no reason at all, or perhaps it happened for the most
profound of reasons. Either way, none of that, absolutely none of it, can stop
me from being a decent fellow for myself. Why am I always complaining about
what has been done, even as I neglect what I might do?
Casting
blame is nothing more than dodging my responsibility to myself, and forcing it
upon someone or something else.
“But I
lost my job, my money, my home, my health, my family! It was wrong for me to
lose them!”
Yes,
these things can go away in a moment. Yes, someone else may have unjustly taken
them away. But here is the most important point: none of these things are me. If I learn that, I avoid all the
turmoil and agony.
The me behind it all is about my own ability
to live well. Nothing ever takes that away. Change the expectations, and you
change the outcome.
Written in 9/2009
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